How to Use a CAGR Calculator to Compare Investments Fairly
By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Calculators
Compound Annual Growth Rate sounds technical, but the idea is simple: it is the steady yearly pace that would take your starting amount to your ending amount over a set number of years. Real investments rarely grow at a fixed rate, but CAGR gives you a single, comparable number that strips out the noise of good years and bad years. That makes it the go-to metric whenever someone wants to say how fast something grew without listing every annual figure.
To use the calculator, gather three things: where the value started, where it ended, and how long that took in years. Suppose a fund grew from 10,000 to 16,000 over four years. Enter those numbers and the tool computes (16,000 / 10,000) ^ (1/4) - 1, which is roughly 12.5 percent per year. You did not earn exactly 12.5 percent in any single year, but that rate, compounded annually, reproduces the same finishing balance.
The most valuable thing CAGR does is let you compare options that ran for different lengths of time. A stock held for three years and a property held for seven cannot be compared by raw profit alone, because the longer hold had more time to grow. Annualizing both to a CAGR puts them on the same yearly scale, so you can judge which one actually grew faster per year rather than which one simply had longer to add up.
The classic mistake is confusing CAGR with the simple average of yearly returns. If an investment gains 50 percent one year and loses 50 percent the next, the arithmetic average is zero, yet you have actually lost money: 100 becomes 150, then 75. CAGR captures that reality because it multiplies the periods together instead of adding them, which is exactly why serious performance reporting leans on the geometric measure.
Treat CAGR as a clean summary, not the whole story. It deliberately ignores the bumps along the way, says nothing about risk or volatility, and assumes you neither added nor withdrew money during the period. For a true measure of an account with regular contributions, you would need a money-weighted return instead. Used for what it is, though, CAGR is one of the fastest, clearest ways to express and compare long-run growth.
Quick tips
- Make sure your start and end values cover exactly the period you intend; including or excluding a partial year quietly shifts the result.
- For sub-year spans, convert months to a decimal of a year (eight months = 0.667) so the calculator annualizes the rate correctly.
- When comparing two investments, always annualize both to CAGR rather than comparing total percentage gains over unequal time frames.
- Pair a high CAGR with a look at the underlying year-by-year returns, since the smoothed figure can hide sharp drops and recoveries along the way.
The CAGR Calculator is free to use as often as you like — no signup required.